Waiting for an underground in Koln - the ubiquitous U Bahn - it reminded me of an old horror movie I caught in 2004, Creep.
Creep starred rising German starlet Franke Potente (famously Jason Bourne's fraulien in the first film) and after checking Creep was indeed partly filmed in Cologne's vast underground train network.
Essentially Creep involved the teenage Franke missing the last London tube and therein began her descent into the dark and monstrous underbelly of an abandoned line.
The monster in Creep is truly appalling, a deranged throwback left over from a defunct and hidden government lab when he was just a child. Now adult the eponymous Creep kidnaps lone commuters to continue the insanities of the lab experiments he himself endured and twisted even further in his disintegrating mind.
I was never sure if the Creep was a cannibal but the creatures in the first London Underground film I ever saw certainly were, the legendary Death Line.
Death Line is much older. Made in 1972 it would have been a shocker back then. It starred Donald Pleasance and Christopher Lee. The damsel was played by Sharon Gurney, a relative of Hammer Horror stalwart Michael Gough.
Basically Death Line revolves around an aging couple trapped years before in the old Victorian lines. Sustaining themselves on marooned passengers the couple ascend further into the modern underground, now completely cannibalistic and eventually attracting the attention of both the police and MI5!
The third and final film in my tour of the murderous London underground is American Werewolf in London, John Landis's classic about two unfortunate American teenagers who stray from the path on our dark British moors.
Only a short sequence plays out in the tube but it's one that stayed with me as the helpless businessman is stalked by an unseen growling beast through the platforms and eventually leading to it's horrible emergence on screen, a huge snarling thing slowly advancing on all fours towards the panic-stricken man on the escalator, from where he utters the terrible phrase Good Lord!
Amazingly all three of these films were partly filmed in the same London tube station, the old Aldwych underground.
Have you seen any tube monsters readers? Got any toys or models?
Death Line is one of my favourites - Pleasance is in top form and I like the partnership he has with his DS (Norman Rossington) Marvelously atmospheric and terrific soundtrack.
ReplyDeleteAWIL is another classic worthy of any horror fan's collection.
Creep unfortunately is gratuitous mysoginist rubbish that leaves a nasty taste long after you've seen it :+(
Fenton
I was reading that the director of Death Line only put Donald and Chris Lee together in a single shot, where Lee was seated. He was just so tall compared to Don P! I agree as well Fenton, Creep is an unpleasant flick.
DeleteI think Hammer's Quatermas and the Pit will always be my quintessential Tube film!
ReplyDeleteOf course! How could I forget Looey! The mother of all tube films!
DeleteYep - I'm with looey, Quatermass! American Werewolf is fabulous, both as a black comedy classic, but also as a shocker. The escalator scene is one of my favourites, as its the first reveal of the wolf. Another Tube horror is Midnight Meat Train, loosely based on Clive Barkers short story, it features Vinny Jones as the stalking terror with the sledgehammer and is very bloody. Not a great film by any means.
ReplyDeleteI quite enjoyed MMM Wote. Clive Barker's Books of Blood we're exceptionally good short stories.
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